Mark AlmondDaily Mail Chaos in Kiev could set off a tsunami that will toss Western Europe from its moorings too. It is a mistake to think we are watching from a safe distance. Maybe Ukraine is as foreign to the British people today as it was when an obscure crisis on its southern coast in Queen Victoria’s reign became the Crimean War. But not since the 1850s has this country come so close to colliding with Russia. Ukraine sits on the fault line dividing Eastern Europe between pro-Western and pro-Russian views. Her people are split over attitudes to the old imperial capital, Moscow. Civil war would be a tragedy for Ukraine’s people. But what makes the crisis so dangerous is the international dimension.Full story here.